The Daily Worker Newspaper, March 21, 1929, Page 5

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odio ’ ; ‘ DAILY WORKER, J W YORK, THU! CH 21 Five DAY, MAR Record Attendance at Philadelphia t. Supplies 3 Wall S YOUNG WORKERS. ARRESTED BY U.S. ARMY OFFICERS | RTGS | | GirlsDistributeLeaflets to Servicemen (Special to the Daily Worker) — | HILADELPHIA, Pa, (By Mail). ‘The Regional Conference of the | rnationaal Labor Defense, held i had the best attendance in} years, 47 organizations being repre- | sented by 78 delegates. These organizations consisted of trade unions, fraternal labor groups, | International Labor | nd wonten’s or- by the U.S. to be used agaiast 1 | dnvperialism. nization ives from ington, ig Penn- nd from Camden T. (Continued from Page Thre {go to England on daddy’s business \I asked Nadezhda Ivanovna, as a ‘oke, to come along ss my compan- ion, something like a secretary. is afraid of what people will say.| One in our midst to-be afraid of | public opinion! That’s a good joke.” | Us a \ conference was greeted by rt Benjamin, distr orgar izer of the Communist Party, an representatives of the Workers nal Relief and the Young League. J Engdahl reported for the ational Organization of the Inter-! “ional Labor Defense, urging the | thoning cf the I. L. D. on, t to meet the growing at- | Was he about? Really, such words! the working class |deserved instant punishment. But |Sashok, without stopping to think dahl brought to the conference jhad leaped to another idea, and was} the: reeetinget Qe the! Moncow Cons} Pom im cone eledne ne BRERESES + | forence cf Mopr (the Russian I. L,| “But one thing I will tell you, as D. ormanizatién), which he addressed ce ictinpnatt Tenet Poor shortly be: ving the Soviet | Vtyoviine the ed | shortly “before leaving the Soviet +," do anything.. After Nadezhda | ise ‘ ethibibatio’ dincdiston :{ by |Ivanovna refused him, he ran to the} rs 7 é | Economic Section and the GPU.} peggy die area biolh of course you know it was| this important industrial district. Ign et ie oe ie i aire opel Cee ee eT TLD, (stories about the ‘girl. Tt is good will he vigorously defended in the {pat Me was sent to the devil by courts, and a drive to raise money ‘i har already been started, with aos SO ener say nad jueb ea - lxived? ‘Buzheninov,’ he said, ‘has ar arranged for Apr tt Ave | been sent he:. by administzative or-| ; A der from some dark affair, but the | nd Se . To ae Biinned © | question is how long he will stay) | oad ite’. A egainct the Flynn anti-sedition law. ouadtartte heehee st) The SILI. ALEXEIEVICH looked} hazai ‘New Tra ular editorial, and not a man, this - Utyovkin. . By the way, jok- | Swiss Forbid Lecture inc aside—do you intend to stay s|here long?” on USSR, Aid Mussolini “J don’t know. I must cure myself, Perseeute the Workers f need rest.” “Some veneral disease, of course. BASLE, Switzerland (By Mail)./I suppose.” —By their action in prohibiting the) “A nervous breakdown,” Buzhen anti-fascist demonstration in Tessin. jnov answered angrily, and tapped the Swiss authorities proved that} xis nails on the tin tray. they were prepared to violate the) «9 that’s what’s the matter, he- Swiss constitution in order to do he,” said Sashok, and walked ener- Mussolini a service. ‘| getically to the lavatory. | Their willingness to assist the} Buzheninov wanted to go away, murderers of workers does not end | but the beer had made him heavy, | | here, however, for the authorities and he remained sitting, his head | in Montreux have forbidden the sec- lowered gloomily. The door of the| retary of the local section of the|beer parlour opened every minute! )Red Aid to hold a lantern film lec- now. It was a market day. Peas- ture entitled, “The Real Features|ants came in, buyers, storekeepers, | of God’s Own Country,” with es-| townspeople who had made their) “pecial reference to the brutal mur-|small bargains. Around the tables | der of Sacco and Vanzetti. The lec-|ran business talk, low and poor as ture was prepared by the Interna-|the grey sky above the square, above tional Red Aid and has been held|the burlap tents, above the un-| in meny towns in Germany, France, | harnessed wagons, above the rooks’ Scandinavia and Great Britain and|nests in the bare branches. The ihe United States without interfer-|smoke of strong tobacco trembled | ence by the authorities. ‘in layers through the long room of The authorities of the once “free, the “Renaissance.” Boots had cov- nd democratic Switzerland” seem |¢red the plank floor with manure us to turn the country into a|from the square. It seemed t Vassili y of Mussolini and fascists and | Alexeievich that he sat at the bot- mw |tom of the deepest well, and only alities. the garish posters of the Dobrolyot, | Soke came gi ast |the Dobrokhim, the red _ silhouette | HARRISBURG, Pa, March 20/0% & workman amidst ve rat sentence for Elvarez, Miquel, Poo's-| Sacco inhalers veminded him of dis- | | | | erers of all brands and nation- villi BYR by Wee renee SCORy, BY ant faraway Moscow where life the state board of pardons. y 2 He will die Monday in the eleetrie | {h™>/-"ed cp its way through the chair at Rockview Penitentiary for! ; killing his sweetheart, Louise Jacks.| (ASHOK retu:ned from the lava- Recently Miquel escaped from tho] tory, and said, nodding towards Pootsvilie Prison and with a gunjthe bar: smuggled to him by a woman school} “For the sake of that little lady | teacher, shot a guard and special po-}over there somebody's legs were liceman before he was captured, | broken here, and about twenty cases DISTRIBUTE A BUNDLE OF ‘| Daily Worker Order a bundle of Daily Workers for dis- tribution in front of the large factories, in union meetings and all other places, where workers congregate. This is one of the best means of familiar- izing workers with our Party and our press, Send in your Workers Correspondence and ORDER A BUNDLE TODAY! DAILY WORKER 23 UNION SQUARE, NEW YORK CITY Please send m copies of The DAILY WORKER at tho rato of $6.00 per thousand, NAMI! cccccccccccccvccvsssscccenrcceeesessressseceseeensceceeeeees ADDRESS. see cccseesess CITY. ceseccoesesss STATE. cocccschvcvece To arrive not later than.... seeeee Tam attaching a remittance to cover same, “| Court, = : 1 With Planes wt | | | | Nine fleet war pianes have been sold to the Mexican government the “insurgents.” Above, federal combat crew and Mexican Consul General Ruiz with plane at Mitchel Field. The U. S. is defending its oit and mining interests in Mexico and the price of the planes and other animunition supplied by the U.S. will mean even more servility of the M vican government to Yanke CITIES A celebrity.” Behind the bar idly stood a full breasted little “lady” in a striped She | muslin dress, round-faced, powdered. | with a little nose, with combs in her tightly curled hair. A man in black trousers and civilian coat, his elbow heavy on the bar, was talking to her. His long vildly at his companion—what| nose had just run into a plate of| roast liver and sniffed at a pot of herrings. “I suppose I'll eat it,” said this man. and looked oilily at the little “lady” behind the bar. “Give me a little liver, and give me half a herring. Which half? Whichever you wish—either from the tail or from the head.” He sat down at a table, crossed his legs, bit a cigarette down with one of his fangs, and half closed one of his eyes from the smoke. The little “lady” carelessly placed | before him the plates with the liver and the herring, and turned away indifferently. But he invited her: “Sit down at my table, Rai: Pallovna. You won’t bother me. Per: haps just the opposite.” Instead of answering she pro- truded her lower lip, and began to primp at her combs. “Yesterday I sat through three shows at the movies looking at ‘Be Still, Grief, Be Still,’ and you did not deign to appear. I was hurt.” ike ee 'HE fateful little “lady” shrugged her shoulders, and went behind the bar. The man turned his long wavy nose towards her, and drag ging a herring bone out of his teeth, ‘said ironically: “Well, confess that I did embar- rass you a little.” “How did you embarrass Stop your fooling!” Sashok said to Buzheninov: “That is Utyovkin. A Lovelace and our best foxtrotter. He thinks you'll tell about his goings-on. And Nadezhda Ivanovna and this Raise are the worst of enemies; they couldn’t divide an aviator between them last year.” | Two strangers, in jackets splashed | with mud, approached Sashok, and the three of them sat down at a neighboring table to talk of wheat. Buzheninov walked out of the beer parlour. The wind on the square shook | the strings of dry-doughnuts and me? salt fish in the burlap booths, and | ;, |for the convention. * # lifted the ear of a little dog sitting | on a hay-wagon. A shote squealed as a peasant dragged him by the leg out of a sack. There was a strong} odour of salt pork, tar and manure On the dry sidewalk, near a pile of | bath brooms, sat a tremendous wo- WORKERS. | | in Chicago Sunday DETROIT, March 20,—Tho Isa- LD. Regional for Frame-up | LONDON (By Mail).—The police jdora Duncan dancers have captivated ©e apparently seeking grounds to |the workers of Detroit, Hundreds of them have already seen these prosecute the Communists with re- gard to their agitation in the Indian {question and for the publication cf jvemarkable young Soviet dancers, 'the program of the Communist In- lwho began a week’s engagement | ternational. So enthusiastic |Peatedly visited members of here last Sunday. are many workers that they have | Detectives have re- the staff of “Workers Life” and have |questioned them regarding the au- jtaken advantage of the popular |thorship of an article charging the j prices to see the performances more | British authorities with having used |than once. ; A new program is presented each {st | Night, with the famous series of \were heard before tho People’s|“Impressions of Revolutionary Rus-|the Communist International [provocation against the Bombay rikers, ! +The directors of Modern Books, |the publishers .of the program of in |sia” included on each program. This |Great Britain, have also been vis- remarkable series, combining dan-jited by detectives, as also have the cing, pantomime and singing, has | printers. wherever performed. | The Duncan dancers their last performance will |dancers are now {appearing in various cities by jspecial arrangement with the Daily | Worker. Detroit workers are urged aroused the greatest enthusiasm | jobviously to frame up a prosecution | give linking up Communist anti-imper- a Saturday |ialist activities in Great Britain with jnight. They will then leave for Chi-|the istructions of the Communist | cago, where they will start a two|International. This would provide a weeks’ engagement on Sunday. The |new “red” scare election stunt which on a nutional tour, | would serve two purposes, first, to The intention of the authorities is | justify an intervention in Afghan- istan as a safeguard against “Mos- cow agitation” in India, and, sec- |to take advantage of the last fewjond, to discredit the proclaimed in- |opportunities to see them by buying |tentions of the labor party to renew \their tickets at once at the “Daily office, 1967 Grand River Ave. | Entertainment. New York Drog | Clerks. The New York Drug Clerks Asso- elation and dance at Leslie Gardens, 83rd St. and Broadway, Sunday evening. March $2, 8 p.m.’ All organizations please keep this date open. pile peat Bronx Workers Sport Club. A sport carnival and ball will be iven by the Bronx Workers Sport lub Saturday, Rose Garden, Boston Road. nd ball will be given by the Anti-Fascist Alliance of North America at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 HE. Fourth St. on Saturday eve- ning, at 8:30 p. m. Mee te Dr. Liber Speaks, Dr, Liber will speak before Coun: cil 20, United Council of Working Women, tomorrow night, 318 Hins- dale St., Brooklyn, Proceeds to LL.D « & 4 Fretheit Symphony Orchestra Con- | cert. t and dance will be given iheit” Symphony Orches- tra at 75 Clinton Ave, Bronx, Apr‘l 18. ee +8. 8. BR. Motion Picturc. “A Visit to Soviet Russia,” a ten reel motion picture will be shown for once only in New York City on Sunday afternoon at the Theatre, 50th St., east of Broadway. There ‘will be ‘four performances, starting at 2 p,m, ‘The picture will |show the visit of foreign workers | delegations ‘to the Tenth Anniver sary Celebrations, ne: A co! by the 20 rae ey Followers of the Trail Costume Party. The Followers of the Trail will give an International peasant cos- tume Party and dance March 30, 2075 {Clinton Ave., Bronx, | costumes, {Labor Defense. ee Pioneers Want Orchestra. Pioneers who play musical instru- ments are 2 at once. * United Council Annual Ball, The annual concert and ball of the United Council of Working Women will be given at the Manhattan Lyce- um, 66 E. Fourth St, Saturday night, looked at the woman’s bare back, and asked lifelessly: man in a stuffed cotton skirt, and! turning her bare back to the square, | searched for fleas in her shirt. A! grey-haired man in an old officer's | coat with bone buttons, stopped,/ “How much is a broom?” “Two billions,” the woman an- swered angrily. (To Be Continued) FOR RUTHENBERG MEMORIAL (uly 9, 1882—March 2, 1927) Anti-War MEETINGS To Be Arranged by All Districts and Many Party. Units All Over the and Country, the National Office Can Supply RUTHENBERG MEMORIAL BUTTONS With Comrade Ruthenberg’s Picture on a Red Background and with the Slogans:— FIGHT AGAINST IMPERIALIST WAR : BUILD THE PARTY The Price of These Buttons will be: 7c per Button on Orders up to 100; 5c on Orders of 100-500, and 4c on Orders Over 500. All Party ‘Units Are Urged to Send in at Once Their Orders and Together With Remittances Direct to WORKERS (Communist) PARTY, National Office 43 E. 125th St., N. Y. C. will hold an entertainment | 1847) Shadowy Bird,” “Diss and “A Suite of Tangocs” will be pre-|j Waldorf |p. Prizes for best des’ Proceeds to International shown. i} asked to notify district |pe given by the Workers Cultur ‘An orchestra is needed | of 4 | diplomatic relations with the Soviet Union, Fraternal Organizations |April 1, Tickets may be obtained at |the office 80 B. 11th St., Room 533. eae Downtown Workers Club Dance. | A dance will be given by the Down- jtown Workers Club, 35 I Second St. |S p. m. Saturday. ek ae | Dorsha Company Dancers. | Dorsha and her company will pre- sent a repertoire of dances at, the Booth Theatre Sunday night, “The uixes of Love," | sented. Cutters Local 68. A ball will be given by Cutters Local 68, N.T.W.LU., at Park View Palace, Fifth Ave. and 110th St., April 13, Tickets at 181 W. 28th St. oe oe Engdabi Talks at Bronx. J. Louis Engdahl will lecture on “The Soviet Republics in Middle Asia” at the Bronx Workers Forum, 1850 Wilkins Ave., Bronx, Sunday, § p.m. Hungarian LL.D, Entertainment and dance at the Bronx Workers Club, 1330 Wilkins Ave. April 6. eae Knitgoodx Workers Meet. A mass meeting of knitgoods and textile workers in Brooklyn wil held under the auspices of the tional Textile Workers Union at 7:30 m.° today, Vienna Mansion, 105 Montrose Ave., Brooklyn. wae Soa Workers Esperanto. Classes of the Workers Msperanto croup, “Sat,” meet tomorrow, 108 E. i4th St, Rooms 401, 403. ea wana Wolcolona Theatre Party. A_theatre party will be given by the Wolcolonians at the Provincetown Playhouse, tomorrow night. O'Neill's “Before Breakfast” and Virgil Ged- “The Earth Between” will be Tickets may be obtained at the Workers Bookshop, 26 Union Sq. * * #8 Workers Culture Club Concert. A concert and package party will Club 20, Brownsville Saturday, April |154 Watkins St, Proceeds to the Nee- die Trades Workers Industrial Union. i ee Bath Bench 1. L. D, The Bath Beach Branch of the In- ternational Labor Defense will com- memorate the Paris Commune with an entertainment Saturday, March 30, 8 , at the Workers Center, 48 Bay 28th St, Brooklyn. “Marching uns” will be featured by the Work ers Laboratory * Theatre. ager Yonkers Forum. “Revolutionary Tradition in Amer- ican History” will be the subject of a lecture to be given by a Workers School insrtuctor at the Yonkers Young Workers League Dance, | An entertainment and dance under auspices of the five Manhattan | units of the Young Workers League | will be held at Harlem Casino, 116th St. and Lenox Ave., March 20. I'ro- ceeds to the Young Worker. es * Section 4 Dance. nce for the benefit of the) Champion and the Vida | era will be given by Section # of the Workers (Communist) Party at the Imperial Audi-/ torium, 160-4 W. 129th St, Friday | evening. Music furnished by John C.| Smith's Negro orchestra, Tlokets | jmay be obtained at the Negro Cham- pion, 169 W. 188rd_ St, Workers Bookshop, 26 Union Square, or the | District Negro Committee, 28 Union Square. a Sa Broax “Kaptsunim” Ball. Bran2h 6, Section 5, Workers Party, will give ‘a “Kaptsunim” Ball for | the benefit of the Dally Worker, Sat- urday evening at 8:30 sharp, at 2700 3ronx Park i A 12-scene opera. show and imported souvenirs will be | among the features. 8 * Bronx Section Spring Dance. Last Days of the Paris Com- mune,” a three-act play, will be pre- |sented by the Bronx Section, Younx | Workers League, Dramatic Group. Saturday, April 27, 1330 Wilkins Ave, |Bronx. bance will follow the play.’ | acer | | MeKinley Square Unit, Y. W. EB. | “The Hoover Administration and its Significance for the Youth” will be discussed at the open forum of the MeKinley Square Unit, Y. W. L. Sunday, larch 31, 8 p. m., 1400 Bos- | ton Ro. Dance’ follows talk, | {ian Neat | Shop Nucleus 4. Shop Nucleus 4 will meet today at 6:30 p. m., at 101 W. 27th St Ca eS Jugosinv Fraction Celebrates i Paris Commune, | At the Caechoslovak Workers’ Home, 317 EB, 724 St., next Saturday | evening, at § o'clock. Play, speakers, | ete. Proceeds to Jugoslay Communist | daily “The Radnik.” Sectio Agitprop, Attention, A conference of unit agitprop di- | rectors of jon 2 will be held Sat- urday, at Pp. m., 101 W, 27th St. * * * | Section 2 Kduention Meet. Units of Section 2 meeting on Thursdays will join in an educational | meeting today at .8 p, m., 101 W. 27th “The Development ‘of: th Socialist y Today and the Muste will be discussed. oo! * 1 Movement Section 6 Open Forum. Louls Engdahl will discuss “The War Danger” before Section 6, Sun- ‘day 11 a, m,, at 56 Manhattan Ave, Harlem Unit 1 ‘tke. Harlem Unit 1 will hike to Inter- ate Park Sunday. Hikers meet at 110th St. 9:30 sharp. Bring your nds, ‘8 | Ploneer Conference. A conference for the discussion of the Pioneer Movement and its tasks will be held at the Workers Center, | 26 Union Square, 2 p. m. Saturday. | Leaders of Pioneer groups, Young Workers League and Party represen- tatives, Women’s Councils, Language Bureau representatives and Pioneers are invited. * soe Pioneers Protest Meet. } | A mass meeting of Pioneers will| be held today at 4:30 p.m, at 13830} Wilkins Ave. Bronx. Games and |songs will be featured. | ee ae .. Unit 2F, Seetion 4. Unit meets today at 6:30 Manhattan Ave. Brooklyn, cae Ser 5 | Literature Agents, Unit 2F. | Agents meet today at 8:15 p. m. |56 Manhattan Ave. sk j ym. | Fé »omat | * | Harlem Dance. | The Harlem Y.W.L, will. give a pring Youth Dance at the Harlem | Working Youth Centre, 2 E. 110th St. / Saturday, ; + * 8 | bi Harlem ¥. W. L. nit 1 will meet t 110th st. sage 2 East | ee * Section 3 Industrial Organizers, , Unit industrial organizers of Sec- tion 3 are instructed to attend the industrial organizers’ meeting at 101 ee Open Forum, Workers Cooperative Center, 252 Warburton Ave, Yo: 4 Sunday night, rps * * « Outstanding Tickets, LL.D. Bazanr. Comrades are urged to settle for outstanding tickets and ads. for the LL.D. bazaar as soon as possible Bring or mail to 799 Broadway, Room * * * _ Counell 17, U. ©. We We ytillie Littinsky will lecture on “Our @hildren and We” at the council meeting for Friday, March 29, 8:30| Pp. m., 227 Brighton’ Beach Ave, ‘For Any Kind of Insurance” (CARL BRODSKY elephone: Murray Hill 5350 7 East 42nd‘Street, New York INSTRUCTION TAUGHT. Complete Course $10, until license granted; also private and special Instruction t0 Ladies. Em AUTO 845 Longwood ire scHoon Avenue, Brone INTervale 10019 (Cor. Prospect Sta.) Patronize : No-Tip Barber Shop 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) 2700 BRONX PARK EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) Cooperators! Patronize E. KARO Your Nearest Stationery Store Cigars — Cigarettes — Candy 649 ALLERTON AVE. Cor. Barker, BRONX, N.Y, Tel.; OLInville 9681-2—9' Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST Office Hours: Tu Thurs, & Sat. 9:30-12 a, m., 2-8 p,m. Sunday: 10:00 a. m. to 1:00 p, m. Please Telephone for Appointment 249 EAST 115th STREET Cor. Second Ave. New York Telephone: Lehigh 6022 | | | | | DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803—Phone: Algonquin Not connected with any other office Conference; AIL TORIES PREPARE Comparty DUNCAN TROUPE ELECTION SCARE IN MIDDLE WEST, ON COMMUNISTS In Detroit This Week;|Visit Communist Press 6:' € | Chicago city officials whom he helps 78 Delega tes Attend Activities W. 27th St, 7p. m. today. Absentees will be reported to the unit, aes a Section % Negro Discussion. Ida Dailes will speak tonight Unit 4 A package par the Daily Warker the home of Lena St, Bronx P| Bronx Pioneer to Alpine Woo for two meals Meet at 1347 Bost Downtown Pioneers Hike. Downtown section and other Lea- ue Pioneers will hike Sunday. Meet ) a.m, * meer Hike. i port Club will hike | unday. Bring lunch Subsection 2B, Unit 5K. Unit will hold an educatior tonight on The Development Socialist Party and the Muste Group. 1 meet and in others coerced PROSECUTION AND SWEARS MOONEY, : Admits Story Told at Trial Was False (Continued from Page Onc) into giving their testimony by the prosecution headed by Fickert, but acting direct- B, ly under the orders of the San Fran- ciseo Chamber of Commerce and the Merchants and Manufacturers Asso- of the | ciation, Every one of the important wit- International Women’s Day. e! rains y Internationel Women's Day will be|nesses used against | Mooney and selebrated by the Women’s Committee | Billings, without exception, have of the Party, cooperating with Paterson Council, United Council of Working Women, 211 Market St Sunday, 4 p,m, the ae | Intl Ww « Day, Newark, The Women's Section of the Party will celebrate International Women’s | Day 8 p.m, 93 Mercer St. | Council’ of the United itetiey of Wrrking Women will vo-| erate. Co: op Fretheit € confessed that their testimony was false and that they were promised "|“rewards” or threatened with vari- ous frame-up charges themselves, to get them to swear to stories dic- tated by the prosecution. Graft and Frame-up. The presence of graft and frame- up tactics in Fickert’s office was he eepe ee ; |confirmed a couple of years after Freiheit will be held of ADs |the trial by testimony of Depart- & te eee ee Ore Lalise . 177th|ment of Labor operatives who, for the Freihelt, 30 Union Square $t|peculiar war-time reasons, placed per cent discount to organizations or|# dictaphone there. Hckets pald for immediately. The trial judge has asked for Police Form Guard of | Honor for Capone, Up I . in Bootlegging Probe CHICAGO, March 20.—“Scarface” | Al Capone, chief of a Chicago | Heights beer running game, gang- | ster leader and henchman of. the | elect each year by intimidating their opponents and voters, appeared to- | day to testify before a federal grand jury about bootlegging. | A dozen uniformed Chicago po- lice und a whole army of city detec- tives came out to form a royal guard for Capone, as a friend of the ad-| ministration, and to prevent his be- ing shot at by rival gangsters. George E. Q. Johnson, United States district attorney, called “Scarface” a hoodlum to his face and while Capone snarled Johnson stopped camera men from making flashlight pictures of him in an as- sistant district attorney's office, KEEP DAYLIGHT SAVING ALBANY, N. Y., March 20 (UP). —tThe assembly today voted to re-| commit the Cuvillier resolution, which would require county offi- cers throughout the state to operate on eastern standard time. Another Cuvilier bill, which would have abol- ished daylight saving time, was killed in committee. Not only has th forged the weapons that bring denth to iteelf; it has also called into exiaténce the men who are to wield those weapons—the modern working clast—the proletarinns.— | (Commu bourgeoisie Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. New York COMRADES EAT i SCIENTIFIC VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT 1604-6 Madison Ave. Between 107th & 108th Ste. 1s Phone: DiCkens 1096 Blue Bird Studio “Photos of the better kind.” 1808 PITKIN AVE., Cor. Amboy St. BROOKLY Unity Co-operators Patronize SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818 - 7th Ave. New York Between 110th and 111th Sts. Next to Unity Co-operative House Cooperators! Patronize SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y. Advertise your Union Meetings here, For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City Seg ce SRNR — A 4 CARPENTERS’ UNION LOCAL 2090 Meets every Thursday, 8 P. M., at Labor Temple, 243 East 84th St. Office and headquarters are in the Labor Temple. Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 138 W. Sist St, Phone Circle 733%: BUSINESS MEETING<} power.—) pardon for Mooney and Billings, saying that the impeachment of the witnesses by which they were con- victed convinces him that they were inuocent. But the capitali: of Jalifornia keeps them in jail year fter year. The International Labor Defense is agitating for their re- lease. SAY SMITH MISUSED OFFICE ALBANY, N. Y., March 20.—The senate today voted 27 to 15 to con- firm the nomination of John F, Murray of Brooklyn as a member of the New York Port Authority, after an acrimonious debate of two hours, during which former Gov- ernor Smith was accused by repub- lican members of making the Port Authority “an implement of poli- ties.” The working ¢ nnot simply lay hold of the ready-made state machinery, and wield It for its own purpose... This new Commune (Paris Commune) breaks the modern state Xe Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFE 351 E. 77th St., New York, Tel, Rhinelander 3916 . Ye Mect your Friends at GREENBERG’S Bakery © Restaurant 939 E. 174th St., Cor. Hoe Ave. Right off 174th Street Subway Station, Bronx For a Real Oriental Cooked Meal VISIT THE INTERNATIONAL PROGRESSIVE CENTER 101 WEST 28TH STREET (Corner 6th Ave.) RESTAURANT, CAFETERIA RECREATION Open trom ROOM ea m te 12 p m All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S VEGETARIAN HEALTH RESTAURANT 58 Claremont Parkway, Bronx Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) PHONE:— INTERVALE 9149, Comrades, Patronize The Triangle Dairy Restaurant 1379 Intervale Avenue BRONX MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blvd., P-onx, N.Y. Right off 174th St. Subway Station We All Meet at the NEW WAY CAFETERIA 101 WEST 27th STREET NEW YORK Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVE] UE Bet, 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865

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